Polcevera is possible. The name of this place seems to have changed with time from the Ligurian names Pûçéivia or Ponçéivia. Dodwell in 1837 calls it Ponsevere, and Pullen in 1894 calls it Ponsevera. Jervis (1862) writes of a well known and much esteemed calcareous serpentine from the famous quarries of Polcevera (Genoa), and later records an ophicalcite known in the trade as Marmo verde di Polcevera from Campomorone (formerly known as Larvego); adding the quarry is in the vicinity of the village of Pietra Lavazzara (1889).

Stones navigation

Browse all stones

search tips

Searches the database for all stone records containing the words you enter. To search for a text string, put it between quotation marks. To search for stone records that don't contain a word, put a minus sign in front of it.

For example, entering: granite "coarse-grained" -Egypt will find all the coarse-grained granites that do not come from Egypt.